कडोव्या नवमं चैव कोहाटोया दशमं तथा । हरडीयैकादशं चैव भदुकीया द्वादशं तथा
kaḍovyā navamaṃ caiva kohāṭoyā daśamaṃ tathā | haraḍīyaikādaśaṃ caiva bhadukīyā dvādaśaṃ tathā
Kaḍovyā ist die neunte; Kohāṭoyā die zehnte. Haraḍīyā ist die elfte, und ebenso ist Bhadukīyā die zwölfte.
Unspecified (narrative voice within Dharmāraṇyakhaṇḍa)
Tirtha: Kaḍovyā / Kohāṭoyā / Haraḍīyā / Bhadukīyā (sequence markers)
Type: kshetra
Listener: narādhipa (king)
Scene: A pilgrim-scribe or sage points to a palm-leaf itinerary listing the 9th–12th tirthas; a stylized forest-edge of Dharmāraṇya with small shrines/ponds marked by name-banners.
Pilgrimage literature preserves dharma by mapping sacred landscapes—naming places keeps the tīrtha-network alive in memory and practice.
A sequence of named locales is enumerated: Kaḍovyā, Kohāṭoyā, Haraḍīyā, and Bhadukīyā within the Dharmāraṇya context.
No ritual instruction appears; the verse functions as a geographic/lineage list within the māhātmya-style narration.